Film Review: ‘A Good Person’: Florence Pugh Shines in a Story of America’s Opioid Epidemic

Mark Jackson
4/3/2023
Updated:
1/5/2024

“A Good Person” was written and directed by Zach Braff, who’s still fondly remembered for his 2004 hit “Garden State” in which he starred with Natalie Portman. After an immensely annoying and cloying beginning, “A Good Person” eventually hits its stride and turns into a movie you definitely should not miss. It’s a deeply felt meditation on the ravages of opioid addiction, featuring dramatic heavy hitters Florence Pugh and Morgan Freeman.

Allison (Florence Pugh) and Daniel (Morgan Freeman), in "A Good Person." (United Artists)
Allison (Florence Pugh) and Daniel (Morgan Freeman), in "A Good Person." (United Artists)

The aforementioned cloying opening scene is the engagement party of Allison (Florence Pugh) and Nathan (Chinaza Uche). It drips with sentimentality, but it’s a necessary setup for the gut punch of what comes next.

Namely, while driving the New Jersey Turnpike to look at wedding dresses (all Zach Braff’s movies are set in New Jersey; it’s his niche), Allison glances too long at her phone traffic app and neglects to hit the brakes in time to avoid a construction-zone backhoe. The resulting crash puts her in the hospital, and puts her passengers (her fiancé’s sister and brother-in-law) in the grave. She wakes up in the hospital to hear the horrific news.

Allison (Florence Pugh), in "A Good Person." (United Artists)
Allison (Florence Pugh), in "A Good Person." (United Artists)

Out of the Frying Pan Into the Fire

A year later, Allison’s life is, naturally, a mess. She’s fled the engagement with Nathan, lives with her mother, Diane (a rarely seen and excellent dramatic-mode Molly Shannon), and swiftly succumbs to grief self-medication via her pain-management OxyContin. When Allison’s prescription runs out and she spirals into addict behavior of the theft and blackmail variety, Diane attempts to intervene and flushes the last of her daughter’s little blue pills down the toilet. Allison then goes full-on addict, chugging whatever alcohol-containing liquid she can find in the medicine cabinet, and mashing and snorting any pill in there, too, that might proffer a high.
Allison (Florence Pugh, L) and Diane (Molly Shannon), in "A Good Person." (United Artists)
Allison (Florence Pugh, L) and Diane (Molly Shannon), in "A Good Person." (United Artists)
In one of the movie’s most powerful scenes, she stops in a local bar in the early afternoon to pound a couple of tequila shots and has a chance encounter with two local drug dealers. They quickly figure out that they were all classmates back in her haughty, high school mean-girl days and that she, considering them losers, wouldn’t give them the time of day. It all starts off politely, but when they realize that she still looks down on them as lowlifes, one of them (Alex Wolff), taking a vicious delight in her fall from grace, smirkingly turns the tables on her. He makes her verbalize the fact that she’s a junkie and tearfully beg him for a fix.

Collateral Damage

Meanwhile, Ryan (Celeste O’Connor), who is Nathan’s orphaned, soccer-playing niece, is obviously having trouble adjusting to high school with no parents. She’s had to start living with her grandfather, Daniel (Morgan Freeman in extreme avuncular mode), an ex-cop.

Daniel’s struggling to figure out how to raise a teenager in the 2020s, when he’s required to do things like throw some random young man’s clothes out the window after discovering him in bed with Ryan, and then figure out how to talk to her about birth control. Daniel’s a recovering alcoholic with 10 years of sobriety. A formerly mean drunk, he was abusive to his son Nathan, which is why they don’t speak.

All of this compounded stress eventually sends Daniel back to Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, where he bumps into Allison, who has just commenced her recovery and redemption journey through the 12 steps. Daniel blames her for killing his family members but makes a massive effort to put anger and resentment behind him and be of service to her in her rocky entry into the program. “Don’t run away now because of me,” he says, pointing out it’s likely no coincidence that she chose that particular meeting out of the hundreds of other meeting options.

Daniel (Morgan Freeman) and Allison (Florence Pugh) attend an AA meeting, in "A Good Person." (United Artists)
Daniel (Morgan Freeman) and Allison (Florence Pugh) attend an AA meeting, in "A Good Person." (United Artists)

Planes, Trains, and Automobiles

Freeman, per his general standard of excellence, brings quiet dignity and desperation to a role more nuanced than it first appears. One captivating aspect is Daniel’s form of personal therapy: an elaborate basement electric train set, which allows him to stage scenes from earlier in his life. As he explains: “For the model train enthusiast, we lord over a world where the neighbors are always kind, the lovers always end up together, and the trains always take you to the far-off places you always swore you’d go. In life, of course, nothing is nearly as neat and tidy.”

This type of miniature world-building hobby along with other such 1930s, ‘40s, and ’50s hobbies like plane and automobile model building, and coin and stamp collecting, are from a wistfully bygone era of Americana, but it’s fascinating to step back in time with Daniel and see how time-consuming and sophisticated such setups were.

Allison (Florence Pugh) studies Daniel's basement model train setup, in "A Good Person." (United Artists)
Allison (Florence Pugh) studies Daniel's basement model train setup, in "A Good Person." (United Artists)

In this dark time of rampant opioid addiction in America, “A Good Person” offers hope as Daniel and Allison set out on their healing journey, comforted by not having to be alone in their grief. This is thankfully not a New Jersey rendition of the powerful and excruciating, no-happy-ending “Requiem for a Dream.” It also underlines the fact that underlying, unresolved grief and depression are always at the root of virulent addiction.

Allison (Florence Pugh) attends Ryan's soccer game, in "A Good Person." (United Artists)
Allison (Florence Pugh) attends Ryan's soccer game, in "A Good Person." (United Artists)

Pugh is wrenching as Allison, whose future is eclipsed by a tragedy resulting from a few seconds of texting-and-driving. And had the movie been released in, say, October, her performance (as well as Freeman’s and possibly Celeste O’Connor’s) might have come with “Oscar-worthy” descriptions attached.

Movie poster for "A Good Person." (United Artists)
Movie poster for "A Good Person." (United Artists)
‘A Good Person’ Director: Zach Braff Starring: Florence Pugh, Morgan Freeman, Celeste O'Connor, Molly Shannon, Alex Wolff, Chinaza Uche MPAA Rating: R Running Time: 2 hours, 9 minutes Release Date: March 24, 2023 Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Mark Jackson is the chief film critic for The Epoch Times. In addition to the world’s number-one storytelling vehicle—film, he enjoys martial arts, weightlifting, Harley-Davidsons, vision questing, rock-climbing, qigong, oil painting, and human rights activism. Mark earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Williams College, followed by a classical theater training, and has 20 years’ experience as a New York professional actor, working in theater, commercials, and television daytime dramas. He recently narrated the Epoch Times audiobook “How the Specter of Communism is Ruling Our World,” which is available on iTunes and Audible. Mr. Jackson is a Rotten Tomatoes-approved film critic.
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